{"id":27,"date":"2011-03-29T15:12:09","date_gmt":"2011-03-29T15:12:09","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/articles1\/?p=27"},"modified":"2014-10-21T14:10:01","modified_gmt":"2014-10-21T14:10:01","slug":"the-fear-of-god-part-v","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/the-fear-of-god-part-v\/","title":{"rendered":"The Fear of God Part V"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"pf-content\"><p><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/03\/relationship-of-the-fear-of-God-to-our-conduct.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-40\" title=\"relationship of the fear of God to our conduct\" src=\"http:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/03\/relationship-of-the-fear-of-God-to-our-conduct.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"271\" height=\"180\" \/><\/a>Relationship  of the Fear of God to Our Conduct<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Albert N. Martin<br \/>\n<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>We saw in the last chapter  that whenever the fear of God is present it is because God has applied  with power the New Covenant blessings purchased by the blood of Christ.   The fear of God is thus a blessing that is inseparably joined with the  joy and the realization of the forgiveness of sins.  As one author  has so beautifully said, \u201cThe heart is shy of a condemning God but  closeth with and adhereth to a pardoning God.\u201d  Until a man knows  the forgiveness of God based upon the blood of the everlasting covenant  he will never rightly fear God.  He may have terror of God; he  may have a dread of God; but that terror and dread will drive him away  from God.  The fear of God couched in the consciousness of forgiveness  is a fear that causes us to draw near to God and to cling to Him and  to His ways.<\/p>\n<p><!--more-->Now we come to what I am calling  the relationship between the fear of God and conduct, and I have two  propositions to set forth. The first proposition is that <em>the fear  of God is the holy soil that produces a godly life.<\/em> The second  proposition is that <em>the absence of the fear of God is the unholy  soil that produces an ungodly life. <\/em><\/p>\n<h1><strong>Holy Soil that Produces  a Godly Life<\/strong><\/h1>\n<p>What is the practical effect  of the fear of God in the life of a child of God?  Let\u2019s look  at several texts of Scripture in which we see men and women under a  great variety of circumstances, and yet in each case where there is  true godliness, it will be attributed to this soil of the fear of God.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>The Example of Abraham<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>In the first several verses  of Genesis 20 we are told that Abraham has been called out by the word  of God.  As he is sojourning with his wife, Sarah, he comes into  the land of the Philistines.  He knows that there is a heathen  king there and he knows something of the practice of heathen kings when  they see pretty women.  So he reasons, \u201cIf I come into that area  and that king sees my wife, he is going to set his desires upon her.   I will be standing in the way, and therefore he will just dispose of  me to get my woman.  So this is what I will do:  I will tell  a half-truth; I will say she is my sister.\u201d  It was a half-truth.   There was a blood relationship there, but Sarah was more than just his  sister.  The effect of Abraham\u2019s half-truth on Abimelech, of  course, was that he took Sarah into his house; but God restrained him  from any sexual relationship.  Then God revealed Himself to Abimelech  and told him, \u201cIf do this you\u2019re a dead man.\u201d  So Abimelech  went to Abraham and said, \u201cWhy did you do this to me?\u201d  Notice  Abraham\u2019s answer in verse 11:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>And Abraham said,  \u201cBecause I thought, \u2018Surely the fear of God is not in this place;  and they will slay me for my wife\u2019s sake.\u2019  And moreover, she  is indeed my sister, the daughter of my father, but not the daughter  of my mother; and she became my wife.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Do you see what he is saying?   He says, \u201cAbimelech, you asked me for the reason why I was fearful  that you would think nothing of killing me and then taking my wife.   It is because I reasoned this way.  This is a heathen land.   You are a heathen king.  Since there is no knowledge of the true  God, who has revealed Himself to me, therefore there is no fear of God.   For where there are no right views of God there cannot be any fear of  God.  And if there is no fear of God, there will be no ethical  sensitivity.  And since the fear of God is absent, your conduct  will be a reflection of the absence of His fear; therefore I did what  I did.\u201d  Abraham assumed that the only soil out of which godliness  could grow was the fear of God.  And if that soil were not present,  neither would the fear of God be present.  So Abraham shows that  very early in the history of God\u2019s revelation there is an inseparable  relationship between the fear of God and practical godliness.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>The Example of Joseph<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Let\u2019s look at another instance  in Genesis 42.  Joseph\u2019s brothers had come down to Egypt to get  grain.  Joseph was sitting on the throne there, second only to  the pharaoh himself.  Joseph had accused them of being spies and  was \u201cproving\u201d whether or not they were, although he knew all along  that they were his own brothers.  To convince them that he was  a trustworthy and honest man and that his commands were just, notice  what he said in verses 18 and 19: <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>And Joseph said  unto them the third day, \u201cThis do, and live; for I fear God: if ye  be true men, let one of your brethren be bound in your prison house;  but go ye, carry grain for the famine of your houses.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Joseph says, in effect, \u201cI  need give no other reason as a basis for my godly, honest dealings with  you than that I am a man in whose heart there is the soil of the fear  of God, and out of that soil will grow practical godliness.\u201d   So Joseph showed that he, like Abraham, understood the principle that  the fear of God is that holy soil which produces a godly life.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>God Sees All<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>A somewhat unusual injunction  is found in Leviticus 19:14:  \u201cThou shalt not curse the deaf,  nor put a stumbling block before the blind; but thou shalt fear thy  God: I am Jehovah.\u201d  If a man is deaf, he can\u2019t hear you.   And if he can\u2019t hear you, can he be hurt by what you say?  No;  yet God says, \u201cDon\u2019t curse the deaf man.\u201d  What God is saying  is this:  \u201cYour conduct with reference to men must not be governed  by their ability to retaliate against your wrongdoings.  It must  not be governed by its impact on your reputation before them.   The one principle that is to govern all your conduct with all men in  all circumstances is that My eye is upon you and I see.  My ear  is open and I hear.\u201d  Never let your conduct with any man be  governed by any lower principle than this:  How will God view that  conduct?  So what if the blind man can\u2019t see if you trip him  up\u2014God sees it.  So what if the deaf man can\u2019t hear when you  curse him\u2014God hears. <\/p>\n<p>This is why, if you are a student  who fears God, you won\u2019t cheat at school.  If you are walking  in the fear of God, your teacher could go on a three-hour recess while  you are taking your final exam.  It won\u2019t make a bit of difference  whether the teacher is there or not, so far as your honesty is concerned.   Even if she is absent, you will put down only what you have learned.   You will not sneak a look to the desk next to you; you will not pull  out a crib sheet.  But what if you are a cheater\u2014a confirmed  cheater?  That tells you that you know nothing of the fear of God.   So what if the teacher can\u2019t see\u2014God sees you!  Or what if  you are a young man who has two vocabularies\u2014one you use around home  and church and the other you use out in the ball field with your buddies.   You can say your \u201cHells\u201d and \u201cDamns\u201d right along with the rest  of them.  But you never let your dad or mom hear one of them.   What are dad and mom in comparison to God?  Doesn\u2019t He hear?   He knows every one of your \u201cHells\u201d and \u201cDamns.\u201d  He could  give you the time, place, occasion and decibel level of every last one.   If you are content that mom and dad don\u2019t hear, and mom and dad don\u2019t  know, then it is an indication that you are not walking in the fear  of God. <\/p>\n<p>Adults face the same temptations  and the same realities in many situations.  Every April we sit  down to fill out our tax return.  We must be as careful to cut  no corners as if every single tax agent from Maine to California was  leaning over our shoulder.  Why?  Because we fill out that  income tax form in the fear of God.  We must be conscious that  what we put on that form must pass the test of the eye of omniscience,  not just the eye of the IRS agents.  If you are able to cheat on  your income tax statement and claim more deductions for the church than  you actually gave, and if this is the pattern of your life, you know  nothing of the fear of God.  And God will bring it up as a witness  against you in the day of judgment unless you repent. <\/p>\n<p>It is this fear of God that  makes a man in the office or the shop just as careful about flirtatious  glances as if his wife were standing at his side, and she was a jealous  woman.  Have you ever seen a man who has a jealous wife?   When she is with him, he is just like a horse wearing blinders.   If you walk in the fear of God, you are a man with blinders.  There  is a check upon your eyes.  Why?  Because you know it is not  ultimately what your wife sees and what she knows, it is what He sees  and what He knows that matters, and you are seeking to keep a heart  that is pure before His eyes.  Any man who can be flirtatious with  his looks and his words, if that is the pattern of his life, knows nothing  of the fear of God. <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Consciousness of the  Eye of God<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Another instructive real-life  illustration of how the fear of God operates at a very practical level  is found in the book of Nehemiah.  In Nehemiah 5:14, Nehemiah says  to the people, \u201cMoreover from the time that I was appointed to be  their governor in the land of Judah, from the twentieth year even unto  the two and thirtieth year of Artaxerxes the king, that is, twelve years,  I and my brethren have not eaten the bread of the governor.\u201d   In other words he says, for twelve years we have not used our official  position as the means of personal gain.  But he says this wasn\u2019t  always so:  \u201cBut the former governors that were before me were  chargeable unto the people, and took of them bread and wine, besides  forty shekels of silver; yea, even their servants bare rule over the  people: but so did not I, because of the fear of God\u201d (verse 15).   He says that he didn\u2019t do what his predecessors did\u2014i.e. use their  position as a steppingstone to personal gain\u2014\u201cbecause of the fear  of God.\u201d  The basis of his conduct was that the eye of God was  upon him.  He recognized that if he used his position for his own  advantage, he would forfeit the smile of God.  That was more constraint  than was necessary to cause Nehemiah to walk in a path in which he refused  to take advantage of others for the sake of personal gain. <\/p>\n<p>Isn\u2019t that one of the biggest  problems in human relationships\u2014people taking advantage of others  for personal gain?  We are insensitive to others\u2019 needs in the  pursuit of fulfilling our own needs.  We are selfish in seeking  to live to our own satisfaction while we trample over the needs of others.   We are tightfisted in business dealings.  We are unreasonable in  expectations as parents.  What is the great cure for all of this?   It is to be able to say with Nehemiah, \u201cBecause of the fear of God.\u201d   In the most practical way, we again see the tremendous place that this  principle holds in the life of God\u2019s people.<\/p>\n<p>The same is true now, in the  New Testament age.  The moment you, in your Christian life, cease  to be governed in every relationship by the thought of your relationship  to God in Christ, by the sense of His presence, by the reality of His  smile, by the terror of His frown, then the very nerve that energizes  you to press on to holiness is severed.  Haven\u2019t you found that  to be so?  What can motivate you when the thought of your relationship  to God ceases to grip you?  What frown can turn you from evil when  the thought of God\u2019s frown no longer turns you from evil?  What  smile can induce you to walk in the path of righteousness when God\u2019s  smile will no longer induce you?  There is nothing else that can  do it.  When you have gotten beyond the holding influence of the  fear of God, you have gotten beyond the sphere in which holiness can  be perfected.  The only soil out of which godliness grows is the  fear of God.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>An Eye Toward Pleasing  God<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Consider Colossians 3:22:   \u201cSlaves, obey in all things them that are your masters according to  the flesh.\u201d  Paul says, \u201cThough you have a gracious Master  in heaven, you still have human masters on earth, and you are to obey  them in all things.  You don\u2019t make your obedience co-extensive  with your personal evaluation of whether what they have required is  right and just.\u201d  No;  he says, \u201cObey them in all things.\u201d   (The only exception is if they command you to do something contrary  to the law of God.)  And it is so essential that new believers  learn that.  Any new relationship into which you enter by virtue  of faith in Christ does not cancel out the existence of legitimate earthly  relationships.  Do you think that suddenly you are exempt from  speed laws and from obedience to civil authorities?  No, you are  not.  No Christian is.  Paul never taught such a doctrine. <\/p>\n<p>Paul knows that there are two  different ways that servants might \u201cobey\u201d their masters.  They  could, first of all, serve them , \u201cwith eye-service as men pleasers\u201d  (verse 22).  But Paul says \u201c<em>not<\/em> with eye service as men  pleasers.\u201d  That is, don\u2019t do your work with reference to the  master\u2019s eye, because in three minutes time your master is going to  be gone.  He will go off to his business in town, and his eye will  be gone.  <em>Then<\/em> what is going to motivate you?  <em>Then<\/em> what is going to make you produce?  What is going to make you work  up a lather performing that very mundane task?  You will have lost  all your motivation if you are motivated by the master\u2019s eye. <\/p>\n<p>But there is another way in  which servants may \u201cobey\u201d their masters\u2014\u201cin singleness of heart,  fearing the Lord.\u201d  This is the climate in which Paul urges them  to do their work.  \u201cIn singleness of heart\u201d means with a heart  that is not divided between seeking to be a man pleaser and a God pleaser.   It means with a heart that is single in walking and working in the fear  of God\u2014\u201cfearing the Lord.\u201d  Is this to say that the only  way a common house slave can do his work acceptably to God is to do  it in the climate of the fear of God?  Absolutely.  The fear  of God is to govern a very broad spectrum, all the way from a king reigning  in righteousness (II Samuel 23:3) to a common house slave scrubbing  dirt out of a hovel.  Just like the servant, the only way that  the king can perform his duties acceptably to God is to perform them  in the climate of the fear of God.  The eye of the master on earth  is not the focus of concern, but the focus is the eye of The Master  in heaven.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Practical Implications <\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Scripture clearly teaches that  the only soil out of which a godly life can grow is the soil of the  fear of God.  What are some of the most important implications  of this teaching?  First of all, <em>consider the folly of seeking  to solve the problems of human conduct without considering the necessity  of the fear of God.<\/em> God has rooted ethics (human conduct)  in religion (man\u2019s relationship to God).  Follow me closely.   When you slay true religion, it is only a matter of time before any  semblance of ethical integrity will die.  Three or four generations  ago God was thrown out of our national life, so far as true religion  is concerned.  In the place of true religion came humanism\u2014the  notion that man is god\u2014and liberalism, which \u201cremade\u201d God in the  image of man.  Even so, there was still some remnant of the ethics  of true religion.  What has happened in the past twenty years is  that even this has died.  Now, people have no thought of God.   They are concerned about the drug problem.  It seems that everyone  is concerned about the drug problem.  Former drug addicts are invited  in to talk to the high school students.  Police officers also come  in to try to scare the kids.  But what happens?  The kids  turn them all off.  They say they don\u2019t want to hear any more.   Why?  Because people are attempting to attack an ethical problem  without facing this principle that the fear of God is the only soil  out of which godly living and stable ethics can grow.  Paul said  it this way in Romans 1:28:  \u201cAnd even as they refused to have  God in their knowledge, God gave them up unto a reprobate mind.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>The second thing to consider  is <em>the relationship between true revival and the ethical and social  changes which always follow.<\/em> A revival is an extensive and  powerful movement of the Spirit of God, implanting true religion\u2014the  fear of God\u2014in the hearts of many people in a given geographical area.   And what happens whenever God works in such a way?  What happens  in a community of 10,000 people if suddenly 1,000 of those people begin  to walk in the fear of God?  The conduct of those people is no  longer governed by the eye of the policeman but by the eye of God.   The students in the schools conduct themselves not with reference to  the teacher\u2019s eye but to the eye of God.  The community becomes  a little Eden.  Why?  Because the fear of God implanted in  the hearts of a number of people begins to be the soil out of which  grows ethical uprightness.  People begin to be kind to one another  and thoughtful of one another.  Every revival in history has always  been the womb out of which great social changes have come. <\/p>\n<p>The third application is that <em> parents must consider the basis upon which we should evaluate our influence  with our children. <\/em>There are three great strands of influence  upon our children.  The first and essential one is the home; the  second is the school; and the third is the church.  Did I get the  order mixed up?  No.  You have them under your roof for the  greatest number of hours and therefore have the most powerful influence.   The school has them the next greatest number of hours, and the church  has them the fewest.<\/p>\n<p>Do you want to evaluate whether  your influence as a parent is an influence owned of God and is being  used as an instrument in the hands of God?  Here is how you evaluate  it:  to what extent are your children learning the fear of God  by your example and by your precepts?  Do your children see that,  in all of your conduct, the most forceful and powerful influence upon  you is the eye of God?  Or do they see you living two or three  different kinds of lives\u2014one in church, one with a certain class of  friends, one with another circle of friends?  By your example and  by your precepts, are you teaching your children the fear of God?   If not, don\u2019t be surprised if someday your daughter has run off and  gotten pregnant or your son has gotten hooked on dope.  Don\u2019t  be surprised if you have not provided a home in which the fear of God  is taught.  That alone will keep them. <\/p>\n<p>Evaluate the influence of the  school your children attend along this same line.  If God says  that the fear of God is the chief part of knowledge, then I think it  is right to say that the absence of the fear of God is the chief part  of folly.  And if that is true, many children are under calculated  folly day in and day out in their public school system.  They are  taught that life can be lived without reference to the fear of God.   You may say, there is no teacher that ever says that.  But by the  very absence of any attempt to teach any standard of ethics and morality  that includes the fear of God, they are saying the fear of God is not  needed. <\/p>\n<p>This is how you evaluate the  influence of the church:  Does my church teach my children the  fear of God, or does it just keep them busy?  Does it teach the  true character of God?  Does it seek by the grace of God to implant  in young people the sense of His presence and the requirements of His  holy law and the wonders of His grace?  That is the measure by  which to evaluate the church\u2019s influence.  And we must evaluate  it not only with reference to the young people but with reference to  ourselves.  What do the hymns we sing teach us?  What is the  climate of worship created?  Does it promote and seek to maintain  the fear of God in people?<\/p>\n<p>The fear of God is the soil  out of which a godly life grows, and it is only in the soil of the fear  of God that true godliness will ever be found.  Are you a student  who has developed the habit of cheating at school?  Why do you  do it?  Why can you lie, as long as you are sure your mom and dad  won\u2019t find out?  Why can you swear when you\u2019re playing with  your friends, but you wouldn\u2019t dare do it around your parents?   It is because the fear of God is not in your heart.  That is your  great need, that God would put His fear into your heart.<\/p>\n<p>The children of God ought to  examine themselves, too.  Why is it that we cut corners at times?   Isn\u2019t it because we have moved out of the realm of the fear of God?   That\u2019s why God says we need to be in His fear all the day long.   It is unthinkable, isn\u2019t it, that you would cut corners on your income  tax if you were living in the consciousness of the fear of God?   \u201cAs I fill out this form, the eye of my God is upon me.  Will  He smile when I am done?\u201d  That\u2019s when it becomes real.   I urge you to cry to God that He would increase His fear in your heart,  for only to the extent that His fear is increased, will godliness and  practical holiness be worked out in fuller measures than you have known  before. <\/p>\n<h1><strong>Unholy Soil that Produces  an Ungodly Life<\/strong><\/h1>\n<p>If the fear of God is the soil  out of which a godly life grows, then by the sheer pressure of logic  it is right to say that the absence of the fear of God is the unholy  soil out of which an ungodly life grows.  However, we need not  rely on sheer logic to prove this proposition; it can be demonstrated  from Scripture.  We will do this, first of all by considering a  key text in some depth that will set the framework of our study.   Secondly, we will look at several specific passages that support the  conclusion of this main text.  Then, we will draw out some practical  conclusions and observations.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>A Key Text:    Romans 3:18<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>A key text to demonstrate this  proposition that the absence of the fear of God is the unholy soil which  produces an ungodly life is Romans 3:18:  \u201cThere is no fear of  God before their eyes.\u201d  This quotation from the Old Testament  wraps up a string of Scripture proofs given by Paul to establish the  sinfulness of men before God.  He says that the underlying cause  for the ungodliness of the whole world is that, \u201cThere is no fear  of God before their eyes.\u201d  The absence of the fear of God is  the cause of a disordered, ungodly life, such as Paul describes in Romans  3:10-18.  This absence is like a noxious plant in the heart of  man.<\/p>\n<p>The ungodly, as they view life,  as they live life, as they carry out their desires and ambitions, do  so devoid of the fear of God.  When someone has just had his picture  taken, and a camera with a flashbulb has been used, he will have a bright  spot before his eyes for the next minute or two.  Everything he  looks at will appear to have that bright spot superimposed on it.   He can\u2019t look at his hand, at a tree, at a house, or at another person  without seeing the spot.  It is continually \u201cbefore his eyes.\u201d   But the Scripture says of the wicked, \u201cThere is no fear of God before  their eyes.\u201d  That is, when they get up in the morning and contemplate  the coming day, they look out upon life without having superimposed  upon it the being of God, the claims of God, the character of God, the  salvation of God, the law of God, the judgment of God.  They go  out into that day with no fear of God superimposed upon their life.   That is Paul\u2019s accusation.  So, he tells us, when you see the  life the ungodly live, this is the explanation behind it.  This  is the reason that the life of the ungodly is so depraved and sinful:   \u201cThere is no fear of God before their eyes.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The godly man is the man who,  in everything, has the \u201cbright spot\u201d of the fear of God before his  eyes.  He can\u2019t think of the day before him without reflexively  thinking, \u201cThis is the day that the Lord has made.  I am His  servant.  He is my God.  So as I go out into this day, into  the shop, into the school, into the office; as I work or engage in conversation,  everything must have stamped upon it the reality of God\u2019s being, of  my relationship to Him, of His claims upon me, of His provision for  me.\u201d  The fear of God is before his eyes, and it colors every  facet of his life.  Conversely, the ungodly man is the man who  does not have this fear of God before his eyes.  He has no regard  to God\u2019s authority, no consideration of God\u2019s law, no concern to  have His smile, no dread of His frown. <\/p>\n<p>We learn at the very outset,  therefore, that moral and ethical problems, problems of life and of  conduct, are rooted in religious principles.  You cannot separate  ethics, morality and conduct from true biblical religion.  You  cannot do it, for God has joined them.  What God has joined together,  man puts asunder only to his own peril.  It is clear from Romans  3 that the absence of the fear of God is indeed the unholy soil out  of which the ungodly life grows.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Supporting Texts<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<h4><strong><em>Psalm 10<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Having looked at this key text  as a point of reference, so to speak, let us consider two other supporting  and explanatory texts in the Old Testament.  First, Psalm 10.   The context of this Psalm is set out very clearly in the first two verses:   \u201cWhy standest thou afar off, O Jehovah?  Why hidest thou thyself  in times of trouble?  In the pride of the wicked the poor is hotly  pursued.\u201d  Here are the righteous being oppressed and pursued  by the wicked, and it seems like God doesn\u2019t care.  This is a  great problem that surfaces again and again in the Psalms.  It  is a problem we experience as Christians.  There are times when  we say, \u201cGod, this doesn\u2019t seem right.\u201d  What would you think  of me as a father if I could see my son kicked around and abused by  a bully, and I had the power to do something, but I didn\u2019t?   Wouldn\u2019t you have some questions about the depth of my love to my  child?  Of course you would.  God\u2019s people also have this  problem. <\/p>\n<p>In that context the psalmist  demonstrates what happens in the mind of the wicked when he observes  this.  He picks on the righteous, but no thunderbolts break out  of heaven, and no lightning strikes.  So he is made bold to go  on in his wickedness.  Notice, first, what the wicked man does:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>His ways are firm  at all times; thy judgments are far above out of his sight: as for all  his adversaries, he puffeth at them.  He saith in his heart, I  shall not be moved; to all generations I shall not be in adversity.   His mouth is full of cursing and deceit and oppression: under his tongue  is mischief and iniquity.  He sitteth in the lurking-places of  the villages; in the secret places doth he murder the innocent; his  eyes are privily set against the helpless.  He lurketh in secret  as a lion in his covert; he lieth in wait to catch the poor: he doth  catch the poor, when he draweth him in his net.  He croucheth,  he boweth down, and the helpless fall by his strong ones (Psalm 10:5-10).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The wicked carries out all  his schemes against the righteous, against the poor, against the helpless.   But this section of the psalm is bounded by verses 4 and 11, both of  which tell us <em>why<\/em> the wicked does what he does.  Notice  the reason for all of this in verse 4:  \u201cThe wicked, in the pride  of his countenance, saith, \u2018He will not require it.\u2019  All his  thoughts are, \u2018There is no God.\u2019\u201d  In other words, the wicked  man voids his mind of conscious thoughts of God.  That doesn\u2019t  mean he is an outspoken atheist.  But it means that God does not  enter into the thoughts that govern his life.  All his <em>thoughts<\/em> are that there is no God.  He makes his plans; he carries out his  ambitions.  But he does so without any reference to God.   Verse 11 shows that the same wicked man seeks to rid himself of any  constraining awareness of the character of God:  \u201cHe saith in  his heart, \u2018God hath forgotten; he hideth his face; he will never  see it.\u2019\u201d  He tries to limit God\u2019s omniscience.  Why  does he push God out of his thoughts?  And when he can\u2019t fully  succeed in that, why does he twist the God who remains in his thoughts?   He does this because he cannot live an ungodly life unless he can take  himself out of the orbit of the fear of God.  So if he is to grow  his plants of ungodly living, he must condition the soil until it is  devoid of the fear of God. <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Malachi 3 <\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>There is one other Old Testament  passage for us to look at.  It is Malachi 3.  The chapter  begins with the announcement of the one called the messenger of the  covenant, a reference of course to our Lord Jesus Christ himself.   When he comes, the prophet says he will have a twofold ministry.   First, a ministry of purification: <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>But who can abide  the day of his coming?  And who shall stand when he appeareth?   For he is like a refiner\u2019s fire, and like fullers\u2019 soap: and he  will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver, and he will purify the  sons of Levi, and refine them as gold and silver (verses 2-3). <\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Second, the messenger of the  covenant will have a ministry of judgment:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cAnd I will come  near to you to judgment; and I will be a swift witness against the sorcerers,  and against the false swearers, and against those that oppress the hireling  in his wages, the widow, and the fatherless, and that turn aside the  sojourner from his right, and fear not me,\u201d saith Jehovah of hosts  (verse 5).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The messenger will come not  only to purify but also to judge.  Notice who is going to be judged:   the sorcerers; the adulterers; the false swearers; those that have oppressed  the hireling in his wages; and those \u201cthat turn aside the sojourner  from his right.\u201d  In other words, the Lord says His judgment  will come against all those found anywhere along the whole spectrum  of evil, from those who are guilty of open, gross immorality to those  who are indifferent to the needs of the sojourner.  Then He points  out that they have one thing in common, and it is this:  they \u201c<em>fear  not me<\/em>.\u201d  What does the adulterer have in common with the  person who is indifferent to a legitimate need in another that he sees  and to which he has the ability to respond?  They have in common  that they do not walk in the fear of God.  So the prophet Malachi  tells us that God\u2019s judgment will come forth with fury and with vengeance  upon all who do not fear Him.<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>Religious Hypocrites<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>These passages deal primarily  with those who are openly irreligious in their wickedness, but there  is another great class of persons who have no fear of God.  It  is those who are very religious outwardly, but who are guilty of religious  hypocrisy; they maintain the outward profession of true religion and  perform many of the activities of true religion, but they are devoid  of the power of true religion.  Of course the classic example of  such a class of people are the scribes and the Pharisees. <\/p>\n<p>In Matthew 6 our Lord called  the scribes and Pharisees hypocrites and warned us not to be like them.   For, He said, when they pray, they pray to be seen of men (verse 5);  when they give, they give to be seen of men (verse 2); and when they  fast, they fast to be seen of men (verse 16).  That is, in all  their effort to maintain the form of orthodox religion, and in all their  religious activities, they are devoid of the fear of God.  For  what is the essence of the fear of God?  It is that regard of His  person which makes His smile my greatest delight and His frown my greatest  dread.  It is that which makes me a man or woman who desires nothing  beyond my own conscience for a theater and God and the holy angels for  witnesses.  To that, the scribes and Pharisees were strangers.<\/p>\n<p>Professing Christian, where  is your heart?  Men can see you go through the motions of devotion  to God and obedience to His commands.  But the question is, what  does God see?  Does He see that your outward conformity to His  law is an expression of the fear of God in your heart?  Does He  see that you worship Him out of love to Him and out of a desire to please  Him, constrained by the awareness of your obligation to Him?  Or  has it simply become part of your life pattern, in which you remain  so that you \u201cmay be seen of men\u201d? <\/p>\n<p>Why do you do what you do?   Why don\u2019t you do some of the things other people do?  Is it simply  to keep up the form and semblance of true religion before the eyes of  men?  Jesus said to the scribes and Pharisees, \u201cYe also outwardly  appear righteous unto men, but inwardly ye are full of hypocrisy and  iniquity\u201d (Matthew 23:28).  The person who maintains orthodox  religion in the head, and the form of it in the life, but who is a stranger  to the fear of God in the heart, knows nothing of the inwardness of  true, biblical Christianity.  He knows nothing of poverty of spirit;  he knows nothing of hungering and thirsting after righteousness; he  knows nothing of mourning over his sins in secret.  The sum and  substance of his whole religious experience is what is packed into his  head and what he performs outwardly in his life; but of the goings forth  of a heart after God, he knows nothing.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Impact on Society<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>There is a way that this applies  to our whole culture at this point in history.  Suppose I wanted  to destroy a house.  There are two main ways I could go about it.   I could arm myself with the necessary tools and, beginning on the roof,  start tearing the house down piece by piece\u2014shingle by shingle, brick  by brick, door by door.  But there is another way I could do it.   I could take my sledge and start working on the foundation.  After  an hour\u2019s time a passerby might not be able to see what I was trying  to do.  The house would still look completely intact.  All  I may have been able to accomplish is to displace a few concrete blocks  or put a hole in the poured foundation.  At the end of the day  the house might still be standing if I am taking the second approach  to destroying it, whereas someone up on the roof could have made quite  a mess.  He could have some of the sheeting on the roof torn off.   He might have some of the windows knocked out.  But if I stick  with it, by the end of a full day or two, I would be a lot farther ahead  than he would be.  If I could undercut the strategic points of  stress where the foundation bore the weight of that whole structure,  I could bring the whole thing down upon itself, whereas at the end of  a couple of days, just working piece by piece, the other fellow might  have eighty percent of the structure still standing. <\/p>\n<p>The devil hates the structure  of biblical ethics and morality wherever he sees that structure raised.   There are two ways he can go about to destroy it.  He can start  attacking every shingle of Christian virtue and say, \u201cThere is no  such thing as purity, and I\u2019m out to destroy the concept of purity.   There is no such thing as honesty, and I\u2019m going to start tearing  away at the shingles of honesty.\u201d  But the devil is smarter than  that.  He says, \u201cGo ahead and keep your shingles for a while.   Let everybody walk by and see them still intact.  What I\u2019m going  to do is to go around back where you can\u2019t see me, and I am going  to start dislodging foundation stones.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>So what has happened in our  own western culture?  What has happened in America?  For several  generations the devil has been out back, working at the foundations.   One of his great hammer blows was that of religious liberalism, which  distorted the God of the Bible and turned Him from the glorious, fearful  God of Israel into a formless mass of unprincipled sentiment called  love.  His holiness, His justice and His righteous anger are largely  forgotten.  Then there was the hammer blow of humanism that came  through our American educational system.  It says that man is not  a depraved and bad creature.  And there was the hammer blow of  evolutionary thought:  man is not obligated to God because he never  came from God in the first place. <\/p>\n<p>All of these influences have  been at work, and now it seems that the house that looked beautiful  yesterday is in shambles today.  Everybody says, \u201cLook, the house  is falling down on us!\u201d  Why?  It is because the fear of  God has essentially vanished from the fabric of our national life and  experience.  And the only way there is going to be any widespread  return to any kind of true ethics and morality is to start from the  beginning by implanting the fear of God in the hearts of men.   That is where it must begin.<\/p>\n<p>That means we must go back  to telling men who God is.  When they begin to see who He is, they  will begin to see what their obligations to Him are; and they will begin  to see how terrible it is to sin against and to offend such a holy God,  until they are driven to despair.  Then, when they are told that  this holy God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son,  they will see forgiveness from the perspective of the psalmist:   \u201cThere is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared\u201d (Psalm  130:4).  The gospel will no longer be simply a cheap elixir which  puts them at ease with their own sinful conduct but does nothing to  promote the fear of God.  It will be the instrument by which, through  the blessings of the New Covenant applied with power to the heart, they  will be brought to fear and to reverence this God and to walk strictly  in His precepts and commandments.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Testimony of the Unbelieving<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>The absence of the fear of  God explains not only the spiritual condition of our nation but also  the behavior of every individual who does not believe in God.   Why does the unbeliever live the way he lives?  Why does the unbelieving  young person get up in the morning, eat, go off to school, lie a little  bit, cheat a little bit, fight with his brother and sister, hide the  truth from his parents?  Here is the explanation.  There is  no fear of God before his eyes.  That is the explanation of his  life.  It is the explanation of the lives of unbelieving adults  as well.  It is why they can live the way they do.  That is  why even someone who professes to be a follower of Christ can go home  from church on a Lord\u2019s day afternoon and turn on his TV set without  even thinking that it is God\u2019s day and that \u201cHe calls the hours  His own.\u201d  In fact, it may not enter his mind at all.  Why?   Because there is no fear of God before his eyes.  He thinks that  how he spends the Lord\u2019s Day is <em>his<\/em> business, not God\u2019s.   He won\u2019t stand to have God interfere with what he wants to do on a  Sunday afternoon.  That is his attitude.  Why?  Because  there is no fear of God before his eyes. <\/p>\n<p>If that is a description of  your life and your philosophy, dear reader, then here is the explanation  of why you live that way.  There is no fear of God before your  eyes.  You need to recognize that until you come to Jesus the mediator  of the New Covenant and have Him implant this fear within your heart,  this will continue to be your life\u2019s pattern.<\/p>\n<p>If this principle is true,  that the only soil out of which ungodliness can grow is that of the  absence of the fear of God, may God help us to resist with holy violence  anything that would lessen the fear of God in our hearts.  For  we can only move into the realm of sin deliberately when we have moved  out of the realm of the fear of God.  We must somehow either put  God out of our thoughts or, if we can\u2019t do that, fashion a god with  whom we can be more comfortable in our sin. Beware of any influence,  therefore, no matter how innocent it may appear, if it lessens your  regard of God\u2019s smile and your dread of His frown.  May God help  us to keep ourselves in His fear all the day long.  That is the  whole pattern of grace:  though God puts His fear in our hearts,  He commands us to be in His fear all the day long.  May the Lord  be pleased to help us to heed the word of exhortation and to dread this  unholy soil of the absence of the fear of God.<\/p>\n<p>Posted with Permission. All Rights Reserved.<\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Relationship of the Fear of God to Our Conduct Albert N. Martin We saw in the last chapter that whenever the fear of God is present it is because God has applied with power the New Covenant blessings purchased by the blood of Christ. The fear of God is thus a blessing that is inseparably &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/the-fear-of-god-part-v\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading <span class=\"screen-reader-text\">The Fear of God Part V<\/span> <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[26],"class_list":["post-27","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-the-fear-of-god","tag-albert-n-martin"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/27","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=27"}],"version-history":[{"count":5,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/27\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":608,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/27\/revisions\/608"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=27"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=27"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=27"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}